Upon escaping after decades of imprisonment by a mortal wizard, Dream, the personification of dreams, sets about to reclaim his lost equipment.Upon escaping after decades of imprisonment by a mortal wizard, Dream, the personification of dreams, sets about to reclaim his lost equipment.Upon escaping after decades of imprisonment by a mortal wizard, Dream, the personification of dreams, sets about to reclaim his lost equipment.
- Nominated for 1 BAFTA Award
- 10 nominations total
Browse episodes
Summary
Reviewers say 'The Sandman' series is lauded for its captivating narrative, stunning visuals, and faithful adaptation of Neil Gaiman's comic series. The show explores dark fantasy, psychological drama, and the human condition, with standout performances, especially Tom Sturridge as Dream. However, it faces criticism for uneven pacing, inconsistent writing, and deviations from the source material. Some express dissatisfaction with character portrayals and diversity representation. Despite these issues, many find the series engaging and eagerly anticipate future seasons.
Featured reviews
First of all, series II is better than series I, and that doesn't always happen.
Series II is more mature. The main character definitely evolves more and analyzes his behavior. He even apologizes (though the first time it's a non-apology, just like with politicians).
The series is dark, baroque, stylized, and features some excellent reflections, such as: "The greatest curse of getting what you want is getting what you wanted." The series also requires a certain erudition, as the characters can reference a literary work, revealing only a fragment of the plot or the character's name but not the title. Or they encounter a whole galaxy of long-forgotten gods, from Odin (the perhaps more well-known one) to Ishtar (the perhaps lesser-known one).
The series features excellent humanist themes about the tragedies of ordinary people. There's a great character of a trans woman whose family behaved very badly at a funeral, and a young woman with gloves with a troubled past. These are truly excellent storylines.
Among the show's flaws is the seamless transition from one completed case to another, and then a third. Perhaps it would have been more sensible to make several, but shorter, seasons. Especially since some storylines feel a bit drawn out.
However, despite minor flaws, I think the show deserves 8 stars after the second season.
Series II is more mature. The main character definitely evolves more and analyzes his behavior. He even apologizes (though the first time it's a non-apology, just like with politicians).
The series is dark, baroque, stylized, and features some excellent reflections, such as: "The greatest curse of getting what you want is getting what you wanted." The series also requires a certain erudition, as the characters can reference a literary work, revealing only a fragment of the plot or the character's name but not the title. Or they encounter a whole galaxy of long-forgotten gods, from Odin (the perhaps more well-known one) to Ishtar (the perhaps lesser-known one).
The series features excellent humanist themes about the tragedies of ordinary people. There's a great character of a trans woman whose family behaved very badly at a funeral, and a young woman with gloves with a troubled past. These are truly excellent storylines.
Among the show's flaws is the seamless transition from one completed case to another, and then a third. Perhaps it would have been more sensible to make several, but shorter, seasons. Especially since some storylines feel a bit drawn out.
However, despite minor flaws, I think the show deserves 8 stars after the second season.
This show was so exciting. I've never fallen asleep during a show before. This one?? I watched it, passed out. Rewound it, passed out again. I think it's cursed-or it's a secret sleep aid and I think the plot is just a lullaby.
Great visuals, epic concept.......and the perfect cure for insomnia. :)
Great visuals, epic concept.......and the perfect cure for insomnia. :)
I thought the show was really great the first episodes, dark setting and interesting characters. Somewhere along the way I grew bored by the show however. I will probably watch the second season if it ever comes out since I am a fan of the novels. This was entertaining but the stark difference to how it started and how it ended made it less interesting for me. I hope the next season will focus on what made the first episodes so good. I think maybe sandmand will have a hard time to compete with all the upcoming franchises coming out this fall, I hope I am wrong though!
On another note, 600 characters requirement for a short user review is too damn long!
On another note, 600 characters requirement for a short user review is too damn long!
Season 1 of the show was superb - the world building was incredible; it was complex and grand, it felt rich and full of themes, and so cleverly put together. Despite the many different aspects of the world, the core plot felt focused and all the different characters introduced had relevance that somehow fed back into it. It left me excited to see how season 2 would expand on all of it.
Except then it, kind of didn't. Season 2 wanders around aimlessly for most of it. What new elements it does introduce feel superficial and trivial, and are disposed of as quickly as they are introduced. All the energy from the characters seems to have been sucked out, like they're shells of their former selves. You find yourself wondering what the point of most of what you're watching is, and I'm afraid it never gets clearer.
Season 2 also goes very heavy with LGBT themes and diversity. Season 1 had representation in an almost seamless way that never took the spotlight from the story. Season 2's (numerous) gay relationships and trans character feel shoe-horned in and contrived, attention is purposefully directed to them yet they don't organically fit into the story and so their inclusion feels clunky, forced and jarring in a way that season 1 didn't.
Overall season 2 doesn't do enough to expand on the world built in season 1. Morpheus plods along fairly pathetically and apologetically for most of the season, and the whole season feels grounded in a way that betrays the ethereal, celestial, beings and concepts that inhabit it.
8/10 for season 1, 4/10 for season 2.
Except then it, kind of didn't. Season 2 wanders around aimlessly for most of it. What new elements it does introduce feel superficial and trivial, and are disposed of as quickly as they are introduced. All the energy from the characters seems to have been sucked out, like they're shells of their former selves. You find yourself wondering what the point of most of what you're watching is, and I'm afraid it never gets clearer.
Season 2 also goes very heavy with LGBT themes and diversity. Season 1 had representation in an almost seamless way that never took the spotlight from the story. Season 2's (numerous) gay relationships and trans character feel shoe-horned in and contrived, attention is purposefully directed to them yet they don't organically fit into the story and so their inclusion feels clunky, forced and jarring in a way that season 1 didn't.
Overall season 2 doesn't do enough to expand on the world built in season 1. Morpheus plods along fairly pathetically and apologetically for most of the season, and the whole season feels grounded in a way that betrays the ethereal, celestial, beings and concepts that inhabit it.
8/10 for season 1, 4/10 for season 2.
The best thing about the show is that many episodes feel like movies. So much happens with them that time seems to linger. Even with Sandman walking and talking slowly... deliberately, the show packs in a lot in 40-45 minutes.
I was sad to see that there will not be more to enjoy but what was here was very nice. The special effects and scenery were exquisite.
I was sad to see that there will not be more to enjoy but what was here was very nice. The special effects and scenery were exquisite.
Did you know
- TriviaDave McKean, who created the covers for the comic series, came out of "Sandman retirement" to design the credits sequences for this series.
- Crazy creditsThe Warner Bros and DC Comics logos are formed from shifting sands.
- ConnectionsFeatured in AniMat's Crazy Cartoon Cast: Geeked Week for Freaks (2021)
Details
- Release date
- Countries of origin
- Official site
- Language
- Also known as
- The Sandman: Người Cát
- Filming locations
- Production companies
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 45m
- Color
- Sound mix
- Aspect ratio
- 16:9 HD
Contribute to this page
Suggest an edit or add missing content